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Mixa wants his case reviewed by Vatican

Published: 16 Jun 10 09:00 CET | Print version
Online: http://www.thelocal.de/national/20100616-27879.html

Controversial former Augsburg bishop Walter Mixa, who resigned over allegations of child abuse and misusing Catholic Church funds, said Wednesday he was forced out and plans to have his case investigated by the Vatican.

Taking his case to Rome is a “very good idea which I am considering and weighing very well,” the 69-year-old told daily Die Welt.

Should he do so, he would appeal to Church laws which make certain actions invalid if they occurred due to outside pressure, something Mixa said he suffered. The pressure to resign was “like purgatory,” he told the paper.

Mixa accused the head of Bavaria’s Catholic bishops, Archbishop Reinhard Marx, as well as the country’s top Archbishop Robert Zollitsch of rushing to the Pope with a "so-called abuse case based on what amounts to no more than eight handwritten sentences on a highly dubious scribbled note.”

Instead the two should have been “more brotherly,” Mixa said.

Despite his resignation in April following accusations that he beat children at a Catholic orphanage in the 1970s and 1980s and later misused Church money, Mixa made headlines again this week by returning to his quarters at the bishop’s palace in Augsburg because apparently had nowhere else to stay.

The move is reportedly causing a stir among Church officials, who view it as an act of defiance, a high-ranking diocese figure told local paper Augsburger Zeitung on Monday. As a retired bishop he no longer has the right to occupy his old apartment and must first apply for permission from the diocese administrator. It remains unclear whether he has done this, the paper said.

Mixa said he plans to speak personally with Pope Benedict XVI in July, he told Die Welt.

“He invited me for a conversation,” he said. “Above all I want to discuss how the situation should further develop.”

Mixa also said he plans to continue working as a priest.

Meanwhile the lay group Wir sind Kirche said that while the wish was understandable, it was unthinkable in Mixa’s former diocese. Spokesperson Christian Weisner told news agency DPA that Mixa should not to become a liability for the entire German Church.

His behaviour gives the impression that the former bishop is taking bad advice, he said, adding that he should remember that his diocese is more important than his personal ambitions.

DPA/The Local (news@thelocal.de)

What do you think? Leave your comment below.


Your comments about this article:

06:59 June 17, 2010 by wood artist
Makes perfect sense to me.

Option 1: Allow a case involving possible criminal activity to be heard by a secular court where evidence can be presented, witnesses questioned, and judges who are experienced in the law can render a verdict.

Option 2: Present your case to a religious court, which can ignore facts, refuse to allow testimony of witnesses and victims, selectively chose evidence, and render a verdict based upon unknown legal principles where punishment could be "counseling" or "therapy" or the firm application of "brotherly love."

Yup, if it was me, I'm going straight to Option 2. Who wouldn't, given the track record of the church in dealing with such issues. Obviously you present "the devil made me do it" defense, and all will be forgiven...after a couple hundred Hail Marys and a bunch of Our Fathers.

It isn't just Robert Langdon searching for the stuff hidden in the Vatican archives. The public is still searching for the truth too, and it's darn well hidden.

wa
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